Audio By Carbonatix
Vice President Dr Mahamudu Bawumia has pledged to abolish the controversial levy on electronic transactions, commonly known as the E-Levy if elected into power.
Addressing Ghanaians on Wednesday, the New Patriotic Party’s presidential candidate explained that he wants to make Ghana a cashless economy as soon as possible not only to foster economic growth but fight corruption.
However, to achieve this goal, people need to be encouraged to use more electronic channels of payment, he stated.
“To accomplish this, there will be no taxes on digital payments under my administration. The e-levy will therefore be abolished,” Dr Bawumia announced.
The e-levy, which kicked in on Sunday, May 1 2022, sees a 1.5% levy on e-transactions. It covers mobile money payments, bank transfers, merchant payments, and inward remittances. There is an exemption for transactions up to GH¢100 per day.
The tax, according to the government, was part of its efforts to widen the tax net and generate revenue for development.
However, Dr Bawumia stressed the importance of transitioning Ghana to a cashless society, citing transparency as a powerful tool against corruption.
He highlighted the benefits of cashless societies, noting that increased electronic payments lead to greater traceability and reduced corruption.
“I would like to bring Ghana close to a cashless economy in the shortest possible time. So far the Bank of Ghana has made a lot of progress in this direction by putting in place a lot of the systems and infrastructure required. These include mobile money interoperability, merchant interoperability, Universal QRCode payment system, Gh-Link, debit cards, Ezwich, and GhanaPay."
"We have put in place the necessary infrastructure for Ghana to go cashless. Recently the Bank of Ghana has completed a pilot of a digital version of the Ghana cedi note in Sefwi Wiawso. This is known as central bank digital currency (CBDC) or e-cedi. The e-cedi is designed to work online and offline and will be launched by the Bank of Ghana in due course."
"In my humble opinion, the e-cedi, with appropriate privacy protections, will be the ultimate weapon in our fight against corruption because it will provide transparency, reduce the risk of fraud, robbery, tax avoidance, and money laundering since it will be easy to track the movement of money and identify suspicious activity. The e-cedi will quicken the pace of Ghana’s move towards a cashless or near cashless society.”
Latest Stories
-
Morocco beat Nigeria on penalties to set up AFCON final against Senegal
2 hours -
NaCCA Director-General apologises as withdrawn teacher manual sparks national outrage
3 hours -
Mane destroys Salah’s Afcon dream again – will he get another chance?
3 hours -
‘If Flick hadn’t come, I would have left Barca’ – Raphinha
3 hours -
Real Madrid stunned by second division Albacete in Copa del Rey
3 hours -
Tottenham sign Gallagher from Atletico for £35m
3 hours -
Amateur stuns world’s best Jannik Sinner to win A$1m in Melbourne
4 hours -
FBI searches home of Washington Post reporter in classified documents probe
4 hours -
Trump administration pauses immigrant visa processing for 75 countries
4 hours -
UK–Ghana crack down on immigration crime as fugitive smuggler jailed
4 hours -
Ghana’s Benjamin Arhin shines on Internacional debut with Man of the Match display
4 hours -
Stanbic Bank Ghana maintain top rank in Customer Experience Leadership in 2025 KPMG Assessment
5 hours -
Newmont-backed AI smart lab powers Kona D/A students to victory at Ghana Robotics Competition
5 hours -
Venezuelan acting president says hundreds of prisoners have been released since December
5 hours -
Nilex Suites holds first open house ahead of official launch
5 hours
